Naidoo, Yuvisthi (2019). Comparing the Implications of Expanded Income-Based Measures of Living Standards with an Application to Older Australians. Journal of Social Policy. 48(1). DOI: 10.1017/S0047279418000296

Rob Stones, Kate Botterill, Maggy Lee, and Karen O’Reilly (2019) ‘One World is Not Enough: The Structured Phenomenology of Lifestyle Migrants in East Asia’, The British Journal of Sociology, 70(1), pp.44-69. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1468-4446.12357The link provides free access to the article.

The Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University has released the results of the first Australian study to examine LGBTI+ experiences of crisis support services. The study, Understanding LGBTI+ Lives in Crisis, led by TASA member Dr Andrea Waling found that 71% of LGBTI+ Australians did not use a crisis support service during their most recent personal or mental health crisis. The findings note that the fear of discrimination is a major deterrent for LGBTI+ people seeking support, and recommends an increased focus on raising awareness that support services exist, that LGBTI+-specific services exist, and that mainstream crisis support services are LGBTI+-inclusive.